Vet tech program gets robo dog

The State University of New York’s (SUNY) veterinary technician program has acquired a robotic surgical canine from Syndaver Labs that will allow veterinary technology students to humanely practice required clinical skills on test subjects.

The synthetic canine is an entirely robotic specimen but can breathe and bleed.

The recent acquisition makes SUNY’s program the first accredited veterinary technology program to acquire a synthetic teaching canine  in New York State, and one of 11 programs nationwide to offer students this learning experience.

The synthetic canine is an entirely robotic specimen but can breathe and bleed. Anatomic features and organs are made from a mixture of salt, fiber, and water.

The dog is anatomically correct and reacts as a real dog would under surgical conditions.

Share This Article

Free Membership

Enjoyed this article?
There's a lot more where that came from.

Join 50,000+ veterinary professionals who get free RACE-approved CE, weekly clinical updates, and the most talked-about veterinary magazine in the profession — all completely free.

Join Vet Candy Free →

No credit card. No catch. Just everything veterinary.

Previous
Previous

Retrospective study on osteoarthritis at the time of diagnosis of cranial cruciate ligament injury

Next
Next

My three favorite go to healthy snacks